FREE WEDDING RING IMAGES : LARGE DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RING : ROUND DIAMOND SOLITAIRE ENGAGEMENT RING.
IMAGES is more than a coloring book?it’s an activity book that stimulates your visual creativity! And now, almost 20 years after their first publication, these successful backlist titles are now being combined into 2 big bind-ups with new and exciting covers. Each volume in the series of ready-to-color pattern books stimulates the imagination with an infinite number of forms nested within complex geometric shapes. There is no age limit to the creativity and fun to be found on the pages of these totally unique coloring books!
Another shot of the rings from a wedding I photographed for a wonderful couple. In this shot I placed the rings inside the flower of one of the table decorations at the reception.
Camera: Canon Digital Rebel XT (350D)
Lens: Canon EF-S 17-55mm IS f/2.8 @35mm
Exposure: 1/40 sec @ f/3.2 ISO 400
Lighting: Canon 430EX Bounced off ceiling with a white diffusion card on the flash to control the amount of light spilling forward into the shot
This image is (c) Douglas Bawden Photography, please do not use without prior permission.
Enjoy my photos and please feel free to comment. The only thing that I ask is no large, flashy graphics in the comments.
The minister blessing the rings for Nicole and Jose during the ceremony. This wedding was tricky to shoot because, as you can see, was shot in a mixture of sun and shadows. This required me to crank max power from the strobe to fill in the shadows as much as possible.
Camera: Canon EOS 50D
Lens: Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L @24mm
Exposure: 1/60 Second @ f/11.0 ISO 100
Lighting: Canon 430EX
This image is © Douglas Bawden Photography, please do not use without prior permission.
Enjoy my photos and please feel free to comment. The only thing that I ask is no large, flashy graphics in the comments.
"One of the most important American directors of our time" (Life), Oscar(r) nominee* Robert Altman delivers a "fascinating [and] compelling" (Interview) thriller that delivers an "original cinematic jolt" (Playboy)! Susannah York, who won the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival for her role, is "spellbinding" (Filmex) as a woman whose psychological demons are becoming quite real! Suffering from schizophrenia, Cathryn (York) can't seem to shake her hallucinatory apparitions. Unable to bear the torture any longer, she decides there's onlyone way to clear her mind: Kill the people haunting her in her visions. So one by one, she offs herghosts. But are the people she's killing just figments of her imagination or are they real? *Director: Gosford Park (2001), Short Cuts (1993), The Player (1992), Nashville (1975), M*A*S*H (1970); Best Picture: Gosford Park (2001, with Bob Balaban, David Levy), Nashville (1975)
Effectively a "lost film" soon after its original release, this dreamlike yet razor-sharp movie from the amazing early-'70s arc of Robert Altman's career was among the most mesmerizingly beautiful color films ever made. Where on this planet did Altman and cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond find such colors, such an awesome fairy-tale landscape? (Ireland, as it happens.) Even more extraordinary was the inside/outside landscape of the heroine's consciousness: this is a movie in which madness is inseparable from imagination. Susannah York gives a brave, supernally freaky performance as a married woman who may be an adulteress, may only be fantasizing about it, may be pregnant, may merely be giving birth to a world. Rene Auberjonois, Hugh Millais (McCabe and Mrs. Miller's fur-clad assassin), and Marcel Bozzufi play the men in her life, some of whom may be dead, some of whom are going to be. They all exchange names at various times as Cathryn meets herself coming and going, in search of unicorns. --Richard T. Jameson